Living With Schizoaffective Disorder
Therapy
Q: How many psychologists does it take to change a light bulb?
A: Just one, but the light bulb has to want to change.
Early on, in the year before my diagnosis and for awhile afterwards, I
saw a number of psychologists. (I had also seen one for awhile when I got
really depressed in eighth grade, and had also seen a couple of school
psychologists in elementary and junior high school, but didn't feel any of
them helped much because I was such an unwilling patient.) I would typically
seek a therapist out because I felt really bad, but after a few months I
would feel better and stop going. Early on, I really disliked having anything
to do with psychologists and wouldn't see one any more than I absolutely had
to.
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That's a pretty common phenomenon for therapy patients. It seems that
many of the people who seek out therapists are not in a position to get
better in any substantial way because they have no commitment to making any
real change in their lives.
Achieving real change is a lengthy process and it is often painful.
Seeing a therapist just until you feel better for awhile is not likely to
effect meaningful change. And, in fact, for a bipolar person it's not likely
that the therapist will have made any difference in such a short time - you
could consult a brick wall for your depression for a few months and after awhile the inevitable bipolar cycle while make you feel better.
Time for Meaningful Change
There came a point, I think it was around the Spring of 1987, that I
noticed that I always kept falling into the same hole and that I was not
having any success in making my situation any better. I was on medication
for much of the time since I was diagnosed and although it provided some
relief, I did not feel that it did much to make my life substantially better
either. The symptoms weren't so bad with the medication but I still
experienced them and life just plain sucked in general.
I made a really important decision then. It's the sort of decision
everyone needs to make if they're going to get anything out of therapy and
is one of the more significant turning points in my life. I decided I was
going to see a psychotherapist and stick with it and no matter what happened
that I was going to keep going even if I felt better. I was going to keep
going until I was able to effect meaningful, positive, lasting change in my
life.
(Simply deciding to see a therapist for a long time is not enough. You
have to decide that you're really going to change and face up to the work it
will require and face the fear that it will arouse. Lots of
people see therapists for years, even decades, and never get anything out of
it beside a little temporary comfort. I know some people like this and I
find them incredibly vexing. These people don't want to change and quite
possibly will never change. They may even feel that they're good little
therapy patients because they attend regular therapy for so long. However,
they must be very frustrating to their therapists who spend years trying to
get their patients to face themselves only to have every effort deftly
deflected.)
Finding a Good Therapist
It's important to pick out a good therapist that you can work with
effectively. I don't think nearly all therapists are all that enlightened -
I'm sure almost all learn a lot of important theory in graduate school, but
I don't think any amount of theory is going to make anyone an insightful
human being.
Even if you find a therapist that's good in general, you may not
personally be able to work with them. For that reason, it's best to shop
around. And that's why it's best not to wait until you really need help to
find a therapist - if you feel, as I did at first, that psychologists are
only for crazy people, then likely you're not going to see one until you
are crazy. When that happens it's hard to take the time to shop around
and it's also much harder to pick up the pieces. If you think you're ever
going to need to see a therapist, it's best to start when you're in a strong
enough position emotionally to see one on your own terms.
At the time I made my fateful decision, I was getting by OK. I was
desperately unhappy, but life was manageable. It was not like when I first
saw a psychiatrist at Caltech, when I was ready to climb out of my own skin.
I got a very poor impression of the first therapist I saw. Her primary
concern was whether I had the financial means to pay for her sessions. She
was really quite shrill about the money and kept emphasizing that she did
not offer a sliding scale. I had a good job at the time and would have had
no problem paying her fee, but in the end decided she was just not someone I
cared to be around.
The second therapist I saw was someone I rather liked. I'd responded to
her ad in The Good Times offering New
Age therapy. (Santa Cruz is a pretty
New Age kind of place, one reason I decided to stay there after living in
the urban Hell of Southern California.) She seemed like a pretty happy and
enlightened woman and was quite pleasant to talk to. She seemed to like me
at first too.
But when I explained my history to her - mania, depression,
hallucinations, hospitalization and finally my diagnosis, she said she
wasn't competent to deal with someone as troubled as I. She said I should
consult with someone who specialized in challenging cases. I was really
disappointed.
She gave me the names of several other psychologists. One of them was
someone I'd seen at the County Mental Health department who I thought was
competent enough but I didn't want to see anymore because I did not feel
that she cared for me as a person. The next one on the list was the
therapist I ended up sticking with.
All told, I saw my new therapist for thirteen years.
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Choosing a Psychotherapist
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That's a lot of head-shrinking. I made a lot of changes during that time.
Aside from my emotional growth, I got my career as a programmer started and
built it up to eventually become a consultant, dated several women and
eventually met and got engaged to the woman I am now married to. I also got
my B.A. in Physics from UCSC and started (but unfortunately did not
complete) graduate school.
Life certainly hasn't been easy for me as a consultant, especially since
the economic downturn, but despite that I've been doing well mentally and
emotionally for quite some time and I credit that to my work with my
therapist, not to any medicine I might take. The only professional help I
require is a brief appointment with a doctor at the local mental health
clinic every month or two to check my symptoms and adjust my medication.
Life's been pretty damn hard but I'm able to deal with it and despite
the obstacles I face I am able to maintain my optimism most of the time.
That's a far cry from my experience of 1987, when I had few external
difficulties but could barely tolerate living through the day - despite
medication.
Who is this miracle worker you ask? I'm sorry, I can't tell you, much as
I'd like to. When I wrote
my first web page about my illness, I had her read it and then asked her
if she'd like me to give her name. She said she would rather her name be
kept private. I would rather give her the credit she deserves, but I respect
her feelings so I won't give her name.
Insights From Therapy
One of the main objectives of therapy is for one to develop insight into
one's condition. I would like to discuss the many insights I found but I
feel I could not discuss them adequately in the space I have here. I would
like to discuss just one of them, as the key point I learned also applies to
many other engineers and scientists. If you feel that you would like to know
more than I can say in what follows, then I encourage you to read
David Shapiro's
book
Neurotic Styles, especially the chapter on Obsessive
Compulsive Style.
One day, after I had been seeing my therapist for about seven years, she
said to me: "I think it's time" and handed me a photocopy of the
Obsessive-Compulsive Style chapter of Shapiro's book. I took it home to read
and found it nothing short of astounding. As I read it, I often burst out in
hysterical laughter as I came across something that seemed deeply familiar
from my own experience. I still find it very embarrassing to find a lifetime
of experience so neatly summarized in a single chapter of a book that was
published when I was one year old. I just had to read the whole book so I
bought my own copy and have since read it several times.
Obsessive-compulsive style is distinguished from obsessive-compulsive
disorder by being a personality trait rather than a psychiatric condition
that can be treated with medication. It is characterized by, among other
things, rigid thinking and a distortion of the experience of autonomy.
Shapiro says:
The most conspicuous characteristic of the obsessive-compulsive's
attention is its intense, sharp focus. These people are not vague in
their attention. They concentrate, and particularly do they concentrate
on detail. This is evident, for example, in the Rorschach test in their
accumulation, frequently, of large numbers of small "detail-responses"
and their precise delineation of them (small profiles of faces all along
the edges of the inkblots, and the like), and the same affinity is
easily observed in everyday life. Thus, these people are very often to
be found among technicians; they are interested in, and at home with,
technical details... But the obsessive-compulsive's attention, although
sharp, is in certain respects markedly limited in both mobility and
range. These people not only concentrate; they seem always to be
concentrating. And some aspects of the world are simply not to be
apprehended by a sharply focused and concentrated attention... These
people seem unable to allow their attention simply to wander or
passively permit it to be captured... It is not that they do not look or
listen, but that they are looking or listening too hard for something
else.
Shapiro goes on to describe the obsessive-compulsive's mode of activity:
The activity - one could just as well say the life - of these people
is characterized by a more or less continuous experience of tense
deliberateness, a sense of effort, and of trying.
Everything seems deliberate for them. Nothing is effortless... For
the compulsive person, the quality of effort is present in every
activity, whether it taxes his capacities or not.
The obsessive-compulsive lives out their lives according to a set of
rules, regulations and expectations which he feels are externally imposed
but in reality are of his own making. Shapiro says:
These people feel and function like driven, hardworking, automatons
pressing themselves to fulfill unending duties, "responsibilities", and
tasks that are, in their view, not chosen, but simply there.
One compulsive patient likened his whole life to a train that was
running efficiently, fast, pulling a substantial load, but on a track
laid out for it.
My therapist focused on my own rigid thinking starting very early in our
work together. My experience now is that I have a sense of free will that I
did not possess before I began seeing her. However obsessive-compulsive
style is a trait that is so deeply ingrained in me that I don't think I can
ever be completely free of it. However I find that being able to focus my
attention so intensively is an advantage to my computer programming. I find
that programming allows me to experience being obsessive-compulsive in a way
that I find enjoyable, like taking a holiday to go back to a familiar place
from my past.
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